Meanwhile, America remains the only major pool playing nation on earth that continues to tank.
Wake up and smell the coffee, man. Every single competent snooker player cues the same way. What does that tell you? It tells me the evolution of snooker has been successful: it has spawned beauty, elegance and grace, solidity and structure, great visuals and a killer instinct.
It has NOT produced John Barton playing pool. No, that has been man-made, misled and misguided, led up the wrong path, and twisted and distorted. So the question remains, can we rebuild John Barton? Is it actually possible? Evolution has no reverse gear, John. All we can do is ensure the next generation are not as poorly served as the last.
Oh boy. Continues to tank? How so? Because our players don't travel outside the USA much and have little incentive to train as hard as those in Asia?
Funny that Americans do just fine on American soil. Gee, when they have no jet lag, understand the culture, are comfortable with the food and have unlimited backing they seem to flourish. Go overseas and face tough competition in an unfamiliar place on unfamiliar equipment and they don't flourish, where they have to finish in the top four just to eke out expenses....I guess none of that has any bearing on it.
Let's do a little experiment, because you are obviously a billionaire right....like the Dutch and the Chinese let's take the best players in the USA and pay them a salary so that they can train for two years. Let's hire them some coaches and treat pool like a sport and see what the results are. You up for that? Didn't think so.
It's not about methods it's about opportunities. If you think that guys like Johnny Archer and Rodney Morris are not AS GOOD as any other player on the planet you are mistaken. They are that good. What they are not is mentally motivated to maintain that level because the reward is not close to the effort required. How you can boil this down to methods is ridiculous.
At one time American's dominated pool around the world. Why, because they were simply better players. Until the rest of the world caught up to them in overall skills the Americans won almost everywhere they went. The best American players INSPIRED the new generations of players around the world.
Nick Varner went to the Philippines and beat Efren in front of his home crowd.
No one was talking about these methods being better than those methods - it was simply a matter of the players not being as skilled. But for those in other countries the rewards outweighed the efforts and they devoted themselves to getting better and they did.
Now, in 2014 the rewards for being a top United States player are not that great. You have to be at the very top like Shane is to see a decent level of financial gain. And at the very top there are a dozen other players from around the world who are also at that level who want to get their share of the pie.
As I said you do not understand our pool culture. You simply don't. So stop acting as if it's all about certain methods (snooker) being "better" than pool and that being the reason that Americans don't fare well in events outside the United States. That's rubbish and shows again your lack of understanding.
Anytime you want to pit ANY breathing human against Shane Van Boening in a race to 100 for as much as you want over $10,000 go for it. Pick the best snooker player and offer to play Shane for $100,000. Surely Ronnie can easily afford to put up 100k and test himself against Shane. Should be a walk in the park for Ronnie since he clearly is the superior cueist due to the amazing methods he learned.
As Steve Davis said, a champion is a champion and would likely have been a champion in whatever discipline he grew up with. That statement has NOTHING to with methods and everything to do with attitude.